OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the occurrence of grade retention until 11 years of age and the factors associated with retention. METHODS: This prospective study included 4 452 adolescents from the 1993 city of Pelotas birth cohort (state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil). This sample represents 87.5% of the original cohort. Grade retention was defined as the repetition of at least one school grade until the date of the interview. The following independent variables were analyzed: sex, skin color, birth weight, ownership of goods, age, maternal schooling, type of school (private, state, or city), age at school entry, and employment. RESULTS: The overall frequency of grade retention was 36.3%, vs. 42.8% for boys and 30.0% for girls. The adjusted analysis showed that the lower the level of maternal schooling, ownership of goods, and birth weight, the higher the risk of grade retention for both boys and girls. Black/brown adolescents, those studying in public schools, and those who were 7 years of age or older at school entry had a higher risk of grade retention. For boys, childhood labor was associated with grade retention. CONCLUSIONS: Low socioeconomic and low maternal schooling levels were the factors most strongly associated with grade retention. Strategies to reduce this situation must take into account demographic and socioeconomic characteristics.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the occurrence of grade retention until 11 years of age and the factors associated with retention. METHODS: This prospective study included 4 452 adolescents from the 1993 city of Pelotas birth cohort (state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil). This sample represents 87.5% of the original cohort. Grade retention was defined as the repetition of at least one school grade until the date of the interview. The following independent variables were analyzed: sex, skin color, birth weight, ownership of goods, age, maternal schooling, type of school (private, state, or city), age at school entry, and employment. RESULTS: The overall frequency of grade retention was 36.3%, vs. 42.8% for boys and 30.0% for girls. The adjusted analysis showed that the lower the level of maternal schooling, ownership of goods, and birth weight, the higher the risk of grade retention for both boys and girls. Black/brown adolescents, those studying in public schools, and those who were 7 years of age or older at school entry had a higher risk of grade retention. For boys, childhood labor was associated with grade retention. CONCLUSIONS: Low socioeconomic and low maternal schooling levels were the factors most strongly associated with grade retention. Strategies to reduce this situation must take into account demographic and socioeconomic characteristics.
Authors: Fernando C Wehrmeister; Romina Buffarini; Andrea Wendt; Caroline Dos Santos Costa; Rosália Garcia Neves; Thaynã Ramos Flores; Juarez Lopes; Helen Gonçalves; Ana Maria Menezes Journal: PLoS One Date: 2018-11-07 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Lívia Madeira Triaca; Andréa Dâmaso Bertoldi; Paulo de Andrade Jacinto; Helen Gonçalves; Ana Maria Baptista Menezes; Aluísio J D Barros; César Augusto Oviedo Tejada Journal: Int J Adolesc Youth Date: 2019-01-11